Rep. Steve Stockman, R-Friendswood, wants to make a deal with President Obama.

As President Barack Obama approaches his prime time speech on military action in Syria, Republican and Democrat lawmakers have been outspoken about where they stand.

But one Texas Congressman wants to make a deal.

Rep. Steve Stockman, a Republican from Friendswood, currently opposes taking military action in Syria, but said he would change his vote to support the President if Obama truthfully answered several questions about his proposal for a limited strike.

Stockman, a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, issued a press release Tuesday afternoon requesting Obama to answer his questions before his speech.

Here are some of the questions Stockman wants Obama to answer:

“What assurances do you have that Syria’s chemical weapons will be secured, other than trusting Bashar al-Assad, Vladimir Putin and the competence of the United Nations?”

“NATO tells me any military strike on Syria will succeed only if every factor goes according to plan, which never happens in military strikes. Are you willing to risk our troops and national security on this?”

“Given the fact you have already told Assad where you will strike and given him ample time to organize human shields, are you prepared to deal with the fact Assad may sacrifice women and children to inflame tensions against the U.S.?”

“Should your strikes result in the likely outcome of toppling Assad, who will seize control of Syria?”

And perhaps the biggest condemnation of Obama’s actions:

“Are you willing to return your Nobel Peace Prize?”

Obama is expected to speak at 9 p.m. EST, followed by a response speech by Republican Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kentucky).